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Human Resource (HR) Management MGT 332 Training Employees (chapter 7) Managing Employees’ Performance (chapter 8) Employee Development (chapter 9) Managing.

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Presentation on theme: "Human Resource (HR) Management MGT 332 Training Employees (chapter 7) Managing Employees’ Performance (chapter 8) Employee Development (chapter 9) Managing."— Presentation transcript:

1 Human Resource (HR) Management MGT 332 Training Employees (chapter 7) Managing Employees’ Performance (chapter 8) Employee Development (chapter 9) Managing Employee Turnover (chapter 10) Sean E. Rogers, Ph.D., SPHR, SHRM-SCP Department of Management College of Business, New Mexico State University

2 Chapter 7 -- Training

3 What is Training? An organizations planned efforts to help employees acquire job-related knowledge, skills, abilities, and behaviors, with the goal of applying these on the job.

4 Stages of Instructional Design (fig 7.1) Training should be linked to ORGANIZATIONA L NEEDS!

5 Chapter 8 - Performance Management Figure 8.1

6 What is Performance Management? The process managers use to make sure employees’ work activities and outputs are contributing to organizational goals.

7 3 reasons we do PM: 1.Strategic –PM helps an organization achieve its business objectives (making money, treating patients, registering voters, etc...) 2.Administrative –Provides info for decision-making (e.g., salary) 3.Developmental –Developing KSAOs

8 Conducting Effective PM 1.Fit with organizational strategy 2.Validity 3.Reliability 4.Acceptability 5.Specificity –What exactly are EEs doing right or wrong

9 Test Your Knowledge... If your company’s performance management system created unhealthy competition among teams of employees, you might consider: –A) Focus on attributes rather than behaviors –B) Doing nothing. Competition is good! –C) Increasing the specificity of PM feedback –D) Adding collaboration as a performance criteria

10 Test Your Knowledge... Sarah is a computer programmer whose job mainly consists of coding software independently. Teamwork skills are included on her performance appraisal. Measuring these skills most closely represents: –A) Criterion deficiency –B) Test-retest unreliability –C) Criterion contamination –D) Lack of specificity

11 PM Methods Rankings Ratings Not EE- related

12 Making Comparisons (Ranking) Manager ranks their subordinates performance against one another –Simple ranking (#1, #2, #3...) Alternation (Best, worst, 2 nd best, 2 nd worst...) –Forced-distribution Exceptional (5%), Exceeds standards (25%), Meets standards (55%), Needs improvement (10%), Unacceptable (10%)

13 Making Comparisons (cont.) Paired comparison –4 EEs: Miguel, Sue, Derek, Kaifeng

14 Rating Employees Comparing EE performance against a prescribed set of standards (rather than against each other) Can rate attributes (EE traits) or behaviors, or both Rating attributes is the most used method in organizations (p. 243). Why?

15 Rating EE Behaviors Critical incident method –Specific examples of effective/ineffective behaviors BARS (behaviorally-anchored rating scale) –Rating on many job-relevant behaviors BOS (behavioral observation scale) –Rating on all behaviors necessary –Cumbersome, but yields excellent results

16 Where can we get performance information from? Managers Peers Subordinates Self Customers/Clients 360-degree feedback

17 Potential PM Errors... EEs similar to us tend to get rated higher Contrast error –Good may seem less than good, when compared to outstanding Distributional errors (too far to one side) –Leniency...central tendency...strictness Halo/Horns error –Halo example: staying late at work every day

18 How to deal with performance problems High A High M High A Low M Low A High M Low A Low M

19 Chapter 9 - Employee Development

20 How is Development different from Training? Future... High use of job experiences (such as job rotation)... Preparation for changes in job TDRs Voluntary participation

21 Development is key for the “Protean” Career......a career that frequently changes based on changes in the person’s interests, abilities, and values and in the work environment.

22 4 approaches to EE Development

23 1) Formal Education Traditional school-based –On-campus master’s degree –Online In-house –Hamburger U

24

25 2) Job Experiences Using job enrichment and/or positional movement to develop a worker’s KSAOs –Job enlargement, job rotation –Transfers, promotions –Externships, sabbaticals

26 3) Interpersonal Relationships Mentoring (passive, low contact) Coaching (active, high contact)

27 4) Assessments Performance appraisals/360-Degree feedback Benchmarks/Assessment centers MBTI –Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (gauges an individual’s work preferences)

28 Breaking the “Glass Ceiling” Organizationally-developed systems –Coca-Cola example

29 Chapter 10 - Managing Turnover

30 Turnover is Costly! Successful companies require satisfied, loyal EEs! Firms with low turnover perform better!

31 Terminations should be FAIR! More commonly called: “Distributive Justice”

32 Progressive Discipline Hot-Stove Rule -- organizational discipline should: –Give clear warning –Deliver consistent consequences –Deliver objective consequences –Deliver immediate consequences

33 Progressive Discipline (example)

34 Plant Closings/Mass Layoffs W.A.R.N. –Worker’s Adjustment Retraining & Notification Act –Firms w/ more than 100 EEs –60-day notice –If restructuring will affect 50 or more EEs


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